work mates, which children are the favored playmates, which children are most admired, respected, disliked or feared. F Washington, D.C.: Association for Supervision and Curriculum De velopment, 1950) gives timely sugges tions for putting this information to use. Role playing has come to the fore as an effective device for discovering how the other fellow thinks, feels and acts. Persons taking opposing points of view in a discussion are asked to change places temporarily in order to build sympathy for the other person's point of view. Persons act out hypothetical situations so that groups may identify desirable and undesirable practices in such group situations as interviewing parents, working with community or ganizations, supporting school levies. The group process "movement" has, through gradual maturing, become a way in which persons sensitive to indi vidual and group reactions are work ing in group situations. In this sense it pervades the whole of curriculum study by staff and lay groups as a method of effective action. In this way also it pervades classroom activities, the entire curriculum, as a method of effec tive learning. The concepts and techniques that have been described are in many cases not new. Attention was given to them before group process gave them con certed emphasis. The real contribution of the group process "movement" is the impetus it has given to the under standing and application of certain ap propriate concepts and techniques in group situations. JAMES A. HALL IS THERE one form of organization which is productive of improvement in curriculum? Personal experience leads me to believe that no one form of or ganization will produce curriculum improvement. Curriculum improve ment seems to be possible under any plan of organization that takes into account the nature of improvement and the nature of the people concerned. 234 A few thoughts on this subject based upon both study and personal experi ence may be of assistance to those who face the task of developing an improved curriculum. To make progress, any organization for curriculum improve ment should include among other things the following characteristics: im portance, involvement, opportunity and flexibility.
The organization of a school system must indicate that curriculum improve ment is an important phase of the school program. If this is not done, other activities which are placed im portantly in such an organization will receive the major part of the attention of school personnel. Definite provision should be made in the plan of organi zation for curriculum improvement, and where the line and staff con cept prevails curriculum improvement should be a line function. If the cur riculum department is simply an ad junct which is placed in some obscure part of the organization, it is extremely unlikely that the members of the fac ulty of the various schools will sense that curriculum improvement is an im portant function of the schools. We also tend to think important those things which we are willing to pay for. Consequently, unless there is adequate budget allowance for curricu lum work there is a strong possibility that the items for which budget allow ances are made will receive the greater part of the attention of school person nel. In a similar manner time must be scheduled for study and improvement of curriculum. If the schedule is so full that any systematic efforts for such study must be conducted outside of school time, after other enervating duties have been performed, the results in curriculum procedures will reflect the absence of proper attention within the school schedule. None of us is gifted with infallibility; many of our ideas which seem so splendid when started do not pan out as we had an ticipated. Consequently, definite pro vision should be made for follow-up and evaluation of all curriculum in novations. Wishful thinking is not a sound basis on which to build an ade quate program of curriculum improve ment. As has been said above, importance depends upon administrative provision for curriculum improvement. As things are administratively made important, they also tend to become important to the people who work in our schools. INVOLVEMENT For people really to recognize the importance of curriculum work, how ever, it is necessary that they become involved. It should be apparent that curriculum is changed in classrooms and not in committee meetings or by courses of study, resource units, guides or teaching aids. Modern psychology indicates that change in the classroom is much more likely to occur if the classroom teacher is involved in the de velopments which promote changed procedures. Any organization for cur riculum improvement needs to provide for such involvement. There must be adequate opportunities for channeling of ideas both ways, from the teachers to the committees and supervisory of ficials as well as in the other direction. It seems important that all school per sonnel move together in this process of curriculum change. To be sure, iso lated experimentation, work in pro tected or favored small groups, and other such devices have an important" part to play in curriculum improve ment. But unless they are seen by the total staff as a part of an acceptable, on-going improvement, little of value is likely to result. Little of value will be January, 1952 \ 235
achieved by having faculties pulling in opposite directions. The time and effort iiecessary to achieve a commonness of purpose on the part of the staff seem to be an underlying prerequisite for substantial curriculum improvement. Lxperimentation is essential in curricu lum improvement, but it must be viewed as a part of a whole process and must be watched by all concerned. For any individual or group to be actually involved in activity there must be a certain amount o esponsibility which this individual or group has and accepts. Such responsibility should not be of the busy-work type. For complete involvement, of course, all members of the staff should have their share of responsibility for the decisions made, the materials produced, and changed procedures. The entire staff too, should be involved in evaluating the activities proposed and those carried on. This will tend to insure a complete and com prehensive evaluation which utili/es many points of view and looks at the problem from all sides.. OPPORTUNITY Any organization for curriculum im provement should provide many op portunities for the entire staff. One of these is the opportunity to be heard and to have one's ideas considered. If certain ideas are taboo, if certain points of view are considered out of date and not acceptable, if the patrons of the schools are not included, the program is doomed to difficulties from the very outset. The opportunity to be heard does not, of course, grant license to in dulge in personalities or bouts of name calling. But it does mean that every sincere objection, point of view, idea and proposal should be heard and care fully considered. Another opportunity that the plan of organi/ation should provide is the chance for every indi vidual to be treated as a person of significance. In a democracy, every per son is important and that school or gani/ation which does not reflect and encourage a feeling of importance and significance on the part of its personnel is not democratic and certainly will be much less effective as a school organi/a tion than it might be. A third opportunity is the oppor tunity to assume responsibility. It seems very difficult many times for admini strators, curriculum directors and other leaders to delegate the responsibility which they feel is theirs to teachers and other professional workers. Unless each member of the school staff has an opportunity to assume some responsi bility for the curriculum program he will not feel identified with it. Con current with the opportunity to assume responsibility is the opportunity to make mistakes and to profit therefrom. None of us is successful in everything tried. The most we can hope for is that we may profit and learn from the mistakes which we have made. FLEXIBILITY Any plan of organi/ation for curricu lum improvement needs to be ex tremely flexible. Times change, prob lems change, opportunities change, leadership changes, and even philoso phies of education and philosophies of learning change. To meet these changes, a high degree of flexibility is not only desirable but extremely necessary. An examination of current curriculum or ganizations throughout the United 236
Stales gives indication tli:il tlie patterns which were adequate in the past have, through free/ing, become less accepta ble in the present than they once were. For example, an organi/atioti designed to produce courses of study is not com pletely adequate for the production of instructional guides. A system of super vision designed to provide inspection is not exactly comparable with a type of in-service education concerned pri marily with the purpose of helping teachers. A testing program set up to check certain accomplishments of stu dents against some arbitrary standards is quite different from a program of real evaluation of instructional progress in terms of constantly evolving goals. Leaders in curriculum improvement need to be aware of the tendency for organizations to become rigid, of the tendency for methods t>l procedure to be determined by the organization, noi by the needs of the system. Such aware ness and a willingness to make needed adjustments as they become apparent will go a long way toward developing the necessary flexibility in the program. Improvement to meet changing needs and changing conditions seems to be a matter of desire rather than of or gani/ation. While organizations may be made to meet the needs of the people involved it is possible to get substantial improvement under almost any form of organization if the spirit is willing and if the four items listed above have been properly taken into account. ; ' ';">- MARTIN ESSEX THE NEW YEAR begins at a time when freedom to learn, to teach and to think is at low title for our century. Perhaps never before in our history lias there been more confusion about what should be taught, how it should be taught, and the purpose of the American public school. From the vantage point of the N.E.A. Tenure and Academic Freedom Committee, one is continuously con fronted with the magnitude of the varied movements that attempt to limit freedom to learn. A torrent of restric tive forces is pouring at us. "Freedom to teach without fear or favor" is seriously threatened. To deal with this situation we must be aware of the whirlpools in the stream of economic, political and social change.
Copyright 1952 by the Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development. All rights reserved.